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BLUNTLY SPEAKING
See Perlmutter's Column on Page Three
THE JEUil
Dayan Says:
Strife In L
No Threat To Israel
Vol. XXXI No. 43, Thursday, June 10, 1976 Price Ten Cents
'Trial Balloons Soar
Hint At Mideast
Conference In Fall
JERUSALEM (JTA) Former
Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
expressed the view that Syrian
action in Lebanon poses no threat to
Israel. He took a militant stance in
favor of Jewish settlements on the
West Bank, however and delivered a
scathing attack on the government
of Premier Yitzhak Rabin which he
accused of spreading "doubts and
confusion" among Israel's most
faithful ally abroad the Jewish
by David Landau
people.
Dayan's remarks, coinciding with
the second anniversary of Rabin's
assumption of office, were widely
viewed here as evidence that the
former defense chief is planning a
political comeback. Some pundits
are linking him with Prof. Yigal
Yadin, the former army chief of
staff turned archaeologist, who
recently entered the political arena
and is challenging some of the
by Joseph
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-Trial
balloons are up and soaring for a
Geneva-type conference in early
autumn to move towards "set-
tlement" of the Arab-Israeli con-
flict. Although the White House has
denied the reports as untrue,
skeptics noted that they were floated
by commentators intimate with
highest Administration authorities
and they are usually accurate in
their disclosures of Administration
ideas.
Actually, the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency saw signs of balloons being
readied for floating some five weeks
ago and noted at the time that some
Administration people were
forecasting a grave crisis in late
summer in the Middle East in which
President Ford would have to take a
hand. This role would consequently
enhance his global image as a
peacemaker at the height of the
Presidential election campaign.
Polakoff
In any event, some analysts see
the groundwork being readied by
the U.S. foreign affairs establish-
ment for movement towards a
climax on the problems of the area.
Of deep concern to observers is the
view taken by Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger that "world
opinion" dictates his position on
Rhodesia. While the democratic
principle of rule by the majority of a
country's inhabitants is naturally
regarded as right by analysts, the
difficulty associated with that
"world opinion" as it affects Israel
is that it is easily manufactured by
the Arab-community Third _Wprld
Bloc in the United Nations and they
often get support from others, too,
which put expediencey above
principle.
In another indication of
possibilities towards going to
Geneva, Kissinger has observed that
Continued on Page Eight
Assist Israel's Defense Needs
US. Reported Ready
To Compromise On A id
In Professional Fields
Job Opportunities Bleak
For Jewish Graduates
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-The
Foreign Military Assistance bill on
which Israel, Egypt, Syria and
Jordan along with close to 50 other
countries look to bolster their
economies, continued to run a
course of complexities that makes
its ultimate result still uncertain.
Both President Ford and
Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, however, have indicated,
according to Sen. Clifford Case
(R.N.J.) movements, in the
direction of legislation that would
assist Israel to meet its defense
requirements. Sen. Case said that at
a meeting at the White House, the
President showed signs of
willingness to compromise on the
funding for the transitional quarter
between the current fiscal year
ending June 30 and the new fiscal
year beginning Oct. 1.
The President had previously
declared that he would veto any
appropriation beyond his recom-
mendations for the aid program and
specifically financing for the
transitional quarter. Rumsfeld said,
in a letter to Case, who read it to the
Senate, that-the current U.S. budget
proposals to aid Israel with $2.5
billion for arms and services for the
1976-77 period are not enough.
Rumsfeld wrote Case that Defense
Department forecasts show "Israel
will heed substantially more than
$2.5 billion to meet payments
coming due" because Israel has to
pay for arms well in advance of
deliveries.
Rumsfeld wrote that Defense
Department projections show Israel
will be short about $765 million.
Israel estimates a shortfall of $1.6
billion. Case pointed out to the
Senate that on the basis of Rum-
Continued on Page Eight
by Ben
NEW YORK (JTA) Prospects
4or professional careers for Jewish
college students are poor and likely
to remain so for some time but there
are a few bright spots in a generally
dismal picture, in the view of three
Jewish career experts here.
For example, while Dr. Walter
Duckat, director of the guidance
division of Federation Employment
and Guidance Service, said public
school teaching "is currently not
recommended for Jewish youth," he
added that openings continued to
For 24-hour
prompt, courteous,
reliable service
The Cleanest Cabs
The Safest Way"
BAY STATE
TAXI
566-5000
Gallob
develop to some degree in teaching
learning-disabled children and in
vocational courses, In the latter
field, he added, an applicant might
have to wait some time for an ap-
pointment.
Elias Kagan, executive director of
the New York B'nai Career Coun-
seling Service office, said there are
and will be public school jobs for
persons qualified to teach industrial
arts and business courses. He said
persons qualified for early childhood
teaching, particularly in day care
centers, could count on openings if
President Ford's veto of funds for
government-supported centers is
reversed. He suggested that in the
1980s there may be a general
shortage of public school teachers
because so few are being trained
now.
Declaring that there are job
openings for podiatrists,
chiropractors and veterinarians,
Duckat said there also are openings
in medically-related fields.
American Dietic Association-certi-
Continued on Page Eight
CJP PRESENTS CHECK-Golda Meir, former prime minister of Israel,
accepts a $2 million check from Norman B. Leventhal, president of the
Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston. The money,
presented to Mrs. Meir while she was in Boston last week, represents two-
thirds of the $3 million CJP has agreed to forward to the United Jewish
Appeal by the end of this month in response to its emergency cash
collection drive to help fund life-giving and life-saving programs for the
people of Israel.
policies of the Rabin government.
But Dayan differs sharply with
Yadin over the future of the ad-
ministered territories.
With respect to Lebanon, Dayan
said that Israel should not consider
intervening unless Syrian actions
posed a direct threat to its security
or unless the Lebanese Christian
community specifically asked Israel
for help and offered to mcike peace
with Israel. Since neither of those
contingencies is immenent, Dayan
said, he saw no need for Israeli in-
tervention in an internal Lebanese'
dispute.
Dayan urged Israel to seek end-of-
war or non-belligerency agreements
with Syria and Egypt through the
United States. In the meantime, the
government should act unilaterally
in accordance with its final peace
map, if it has one, Dayan said. In
that connection he called for the
Continued on Page Eight
Israel Watches
Soviet Fleet
Build-Up
by Yitzhak Shargil
TEL AVIV (JTA) Israeli circles
are keeping a careful watch on the
build-up of Soviet naval strength in
the Eastern Mediterranean. While
the Russians normally deploy about
40-50 units in the region, recent re-
enforcements have increased the
number to 75 vessels, approaching
the size of the fleet on the eve of the
Yom Kippur War when Moscow
apparently had advance intelligence
of the impending Egyptian-Syrian
attack on Israel;
Israeli sources expect additional
Soviet naval units to join the
Mediterranean fleet from the Black
Sea, bringing the total to about 90
combat ships and auxiliaries. More
significant, perhaps, is the arrival of
the Russian missile cruiSer Uchakov
in Eastern Mediterranean waters
with the Soviet Chief of Staff, Gen.
Victor Kulakov aboard. His
presence means that local Soviet
commanders can make spot
decisions without referring back to
Moscow for orders, Israeli circles
say.
The beefing up of Soviet naval
strength is seen as a warning
against any unwarranted in-
tervention in the Lebanese conflict,
Continued on Page Eight
734-5000
RED CAB
EFFECTIVE RATE
7.90
ON
7 500
4 YEARSAVINGS
CERTIFICATE
DIRECT DEPOSIT SOCIAL SECURITY CHECKS PLUS 5%
When deposited to your FRE E NOW checking account
ALL DEPOSITS INSURED IN FULL $45,000 SINGLE ACCOUNT $90,000 JOINT ACCOUNT
1320 BEACON ST. COOLIDGE CORNER BROOKUNE 232-2800
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR YOUR BANKING CONVENIENCE MONDAY 3 to 5 P.M. - SATURDAY 9 AM to 1 P.M.
EFFECTIVE RATE IF DIVIDENDS ARC LEFT TO ACCUMULATE
NO NOTICE RATE
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT
PAID MONTHLY
$100 MINIMUM DEPOSITS
OR WITHDRAWALS

User has an obligation to determine copyright or other use restrictions prior to publication or distribution. Please contact the archives at reference@ajhsboston.org or 617-226-1245 for more information.

BLUNTLY SPEAKING
See Perlmutter's Column on Page Three
THE JEUil
Dayan Says:
Strife In L
No Threat To Israel
Vol. XXXI No. 43, Thursday, June 10, 1976 Price Ten Cents
'Trial Balloons Soar
Hint At Mideast
Conference In Fall
JERUSALEM (JTA) Former
Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
expressed the view that Syrian
action in Lebanon poses no threat to
Israel. He took a militant stance in
favor of Jewish settlements on the
West Bank, however and delivered a
scathing attack on the government
of Premier Yitzhak Rabin which he
accused of spreading "doubts and
confusion" among Israel's most
faithful ally abroad the Jewish
by David Landau
people.
Dayan's remarks, coinciding with
the second anniversary of Rabin's
assumption of office, were widely
viewed here as evidence that the
former defense chief is planning a
political comeback. Some pundits
are linking him with Prof. Yigal
Yadin, the former army chief of
staff turned archaeologist, who
recently entered the political arena
and is challenging some of the
by Joseph
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-Trial
balloons are up and soaring for a
Geneva-type conference in early
autumn to move towards "set-
tlement" of the Arab-Israeli con-
flict. Although the White House has
denied the reports as untrue,
skeptics noted that they were floated
by commentators intimate with
highest Administration authorities
and they are usually accurate in
their disclosures of Administration
ideas.
Actually, the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency saw signs of balloons being
readied for floating some five weeks
ago and noted at the time that some
Administration people were
forecasting a grave crisis in late
summer in the Middle East in which
President Ford would have to take a
hand. This role would consequently
enhance his global image as a
peacemaker at the height of the
Presidential election campaign.
Polakoff
In any event, some analysts see
the groundwork being readied by
the U.S. foreign affairs establish-
ment for movement towards a
climax on the problems of the area.
Of deep concern to observers is the
view taken by Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger that "world
opinion" dictates his position on
Rhodesia. While the democratic
principle of rule by the majority of a
country's inhabitants is naturally
regarded as right by analysts, the
difficulty associated with that
"world opinion" as it affects Israel
is that it is easily manufactured by
the Arab-community Third _Wprld
Bloc in the United Nations and they
often get support from others, too,
which put expediencey above
principle.
In another indication of
possibilities towards going to
Geneva, Kissinger has observed that
Continued on Page Eight
Assist Israel's Defense Needs
US. Reported Ready
To Compromise On A id
In Professional Fields
Job Opportunities Bleak
For Jewish Graduates
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-The
Foreign Military Assistance bill on
which Israel, Egypt, Syria and
Jordan along with close to 50 other
countries look to bolster their
economies, continued to run a
course of complexities that makes
its ultimate result still uncertain.
Both President Ford and
Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, however, have indicated,
according to Sen. Clifford Case
(R.N.J.) movements, in the
direction of legislation that would
assist Israel to meet its defense
requirements. Sen. Case said that at
a meeting at the White House, the
President showed signs of
willingness to compromise on the
funding for the transitional quarter
between the current fiscal year
ending June 30 and the new fiscal
year beginning Oct. 1.
The President had previously
declared that he would veto any
appropriation beyond his recom-
mendations for the aid program and
specifically financing for the
transitional quarter. Rumsfeld said,
in a letter to Case, who read it to the
Senate, that-the current U.S. budget
proposals to aid Israel with $2.5
billion for arms and services for the
1976-77 period are not enough.
Rumsfeld wrote Case that Defense
Department forecasts show "Israel
will heed substantially more than
$2.5 billion to meet payments
coming due" because Israel has to
pay for arms well in advance of
deliveries.
Rumsfeld wrote that Defense
Department projections show Israel
will be short about $765 million.
Israel estimates a shortfall of $1.6
billion. Case pointed out to the
Senate that on the basis of Rum-
Continued on Page Eight
by Ben
NEW YORK (JTA) Prospects
4or professional careers for Jewish
college students are poor and likely
to remain so for some time but there
are a few bright spots in a generally
dismal picture, in the view of three
Jewish career experts here.
For example, while Dr. Walter
Duckat, director of the guidance
division of Federation Employment
and Guidance Service, said public
school teaching "is currently not
recommended for Jewish youth," he
added that openings continued to
For 24-hour
prompt, courteous,
reliable service
The Cleanest Cabs
The Safest Way"
BAY STATE
TAXI
566-5000
Gallob
develop to some degree in teaching
learning-disabled children and in
vocational courses, In the latter
field, he added, an applicant might
have to wait some time for an ap-
pointment.
Elias Kagan, executive director of
the New York B'nai Career Coun-
seling Service office, said there are
and will be public school jobs for
persons qualified to teach industrial
arts and business courses. He said
persons qualified for early childhood
teaching, particularly in day care
centers, could count on openings if
President Ford's veto of funds for
government-supported centers is
reversed. He suggested that in the
1980s there may be a general
shortage of public school teachers
because so few are being trained
now.
Declaring that there are job
openings for podiatrists,
chiropractors and veterinarians,
Duckat said there also are openings
in medically-related fields.
American Dietic Association-certi-
Continued on Page Eight
CJP PRESENTS CHECK-Golda Meir, former prime minister of Israel,
accepts a $2 million check from Norman B. Leventhal, president of the
Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston. The money,
presented to Mrs. Meir while she was in Boston last week, represents two-
thirds of the $3 million CJP has agreed to forward to the United Jewish
Appeal by the end of this month in response to its emergency cash
collection drive to help fund life-giving and life-saving programs for the
people of Israel.
policies of the Rabin government.
But Dayan differs sharply with
Yadin over the future of the ad-
ministered territories.
With respect to Lebanon, Dayan
said that Israel should not consider
intervening unless Syrian actions
posed a direct threat to its security
or unless the Lebanese Christian
community specifically asked Israel
for help and offered to mcike peace
with Israel. Since neither of those
contingencies is immenent, Dayan
said, he saw no need for Israeli in-
tervention in an internal Lebanese'
dispute.
Dayan urged Israel to seek end-of-
war or non-belligerency agreements
with Syria and Egypt through the
United States. In the meantime, the
government should act unilaterally
in accordance with its final peace
map, if it has one, Dayan said. In
that connection he called for the
Continued on Page Eight
Israel Watches
Soviet Fleet
Build-Up
by Yitzhak Shargil
TEL AVIV (JTA) Israeli circles
are keeping a careful watch on the
build-up of Soviet naval strength in
the Eastern Mediterranean. While
the Russians normally deploy about
40-50 units in the region, recent re-
enforcements have increased the
number to 75 vessels, approaching
the size of the fleet on the eve of the
Yom Kippur War when Moscow
apparently had advance intelligence
of the impending Egyptian-Syrian
attack on Israel;
Israeli sources expect additional
Soviet naval units to join the
Mediterranean fleet from the Black
Sea, bringing the total to about 90
combat ships and auxiliaries. More
significant, perhaps, is the arrival of
the Russian missile cruiSer Uchakov
in Eastern Mediterranean waters
with the Soviet Chief of Staff, Gen.
Victor Kulakov aboard. His
presence means that local Soviet
commanders can make spot
decisions without referring back to
Moscow for orders, Israeli circles
say.
The beefing up of Soviet naval
strength is seen as a warning
against any unwarranted in-
tervention in the Lebanese conflict,
Continued on Page Eight
734-5000
RED CAB
EFFECTIVE RATE
7.90
ON
7 500
4 YEARSAVINGS
CERTIFICATE
DIRECT DEPOSIT SOCIAL SECURITY CHECKS PLUS 5%
When deposited to your FRE E NOW checking account
ALL DEPOSITS INSURED IN FULL $45,000 SINGLE ACCOUNT $90,000 JOINT ACCOUNT
1320 BEACON ST. COOLIDGE CORNER BROOKUNE 232-2800
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR YOUR BANKING CONVENIENCE MONDAY 3 to 5 P.M. - SATURDAY 9 AM to 1 P.M.
EFFECTIVE RATE IF DIVIDENDS ARC LEFT TO ACCUMULATE
NO NOTICE RATE
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT
PAID MONTHLY
$100 MINIMUM DEPOSITS
OR WITHDRAWALS